Phenol Formation from the Reactions of Amino-Stabilized Alkenyl

Jul 1, 1995 - J. Org. Chem. , 1995, 60 (14), pp 4566–4575 ... Molecular Structure and Bond Characterization of the Fischer-Type Chromium−Carbene ...
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J. Org. Chem. 1995,60, 4566-4575

Phenol Formation from the Reactions of Amino-StabilizedAlkenyl Fischer Carbene Complexes William D. Wulff,* Adam M. Gilbert, Richard P. Hsung,’ and Annette Rahm Searle Chemistry Laboratory, Department of Chemistry, The University of Chicago,

Chicago, Illinois 60637 Received J u n e 7, 1994 (Revised Manuscript Received April 27, 1995@)

The first examples of phenol formation from the reactions of amino-stabilized a,P-unsaturated Fischer carbene complexes with alkynes are reported. A series of four dimethylamino complexes [(CO)&r=C(NMe2)R; 19, R = cyclohexenyl; 26, R = trans-propenyl; 27, R = trans-styryl; 30,R = isopropenyl] were examined with both internal and external alkynes. Their reactions with internal alkynes typically produced low yields of complex mixtures of products and were not synthetically useful. In contrast, their reactions with terminal alkynes were remarkably different giving good yields of 4-(dimethylamino)phenols,and in the presence of a trapping agent, good yields of the arene chromium tricarbonyl complexes of the protected 4-(dimethylamino)phenols. The selectivity for phenol formation was found to be greatest for reactions performed in noncoordinating solvents and at higher concentrations. In contrast, and as expected, the reaction of the aryl complex 45 [(CO)$r=C(NMez)Ph] with 1-pentyne did not produce any six-membered ring product in DMF, THF, or benzene. An interesting solvent dependence was observed for this reaction where lactam 49 was the exclusive product in benzene and the indanone 46 was the exclusive product in DMF. A paradigm for the reactions of carbene complexes with alkynes that has held with observations over, the last eight years is that amino-stabilized complexes will react to give five-membered ring annulation products (ind e n e ~ )and , ~ ~alkoxy-stabilized ~ complexes will react to give six-membered ring products naphthol^).^^^ The first reaction of a carbene complex with an alkyne was reported 20 years ago6for an alkoxy-aryl carbene complex to give a naphthol product, and since that time this reaction has been extensively investigated because of the synthetic value of the phenol products and also because

Scheme 1

(co,5cr%

4‘ R2’ l a XR’

= OR l b XR’ = NRp

-

R5-R6

R$R6+R&R5

R6 > R5

0 R5

XR’ 2 XR’ = O R

XR’

3 XR’ = O R XR’ = NRz

Abstract published in Advance ACS Abstracts, June 15, 1995. 11) American Chemical Society Organic Division R. W. Johnson

Fellow, 1993-1994. (21Yamashita, A. Tetrahedron Lett. 1986,27,5915. (3)For other annulations of amino carbene complexes, see: (a) Chan, K. S.; Peterson, G. A.; Brandvold, T. A,; Faron, K. L.; Challener, C. A.; Hyldahl, C.; Wulff, W. D., J . Organomet. Chem. 1987, 334, 9. (b) Yamashita, A,; Toy, A,; Watt, W.; Muchmore, C. R. Tetrahedron Lett. 1988,29, 3403. ic) Alvarez, C.; Parlier, A.; Rudler, H.; Yefsah, R.; Daran, J.-C.; Knobler, C. Organometallics 1989,8,2253. (d) Dotz, K. H.; Erhen, H.-G.; Harms, K. J . Chem. SOC.,Chem. Commun. 1989,692. (el Dotz, K. H.; Schafer, T.; Harms, K. Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. Engl. 1990,29, 176. (DDotz, K. H.; Rau, A. J . Organomet. Chem. 1991, 418,219. (g) Dotz, K. H.; Rau, A,; Harms, K. J . Organomet. Chem. 1992,439,263. (h) Dotz, K. H.; Schafer, T. 0.;Harms, K. Synthesis 1992,146. iil Chelain, E.; Parlier, A.; Audouin, M.; Rudler, H.; Daran, J.-C.; Vaissermann, J. J . A m . Chem. SOC.1993,115, 10568. Phenol products have been seen with electronically deactivated amino carbene complexes, see: Cj) Grotjahn, D. B.; Kroll, F. E. K.; Schafer, T.; Harms, K.; Dotz, K. H., Organometallics 1992, 11, 298. (k) Dotz, K. H.; Grotjahn, D.; Harms, K. Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. Engl. 1989,28,1384. (1) Dotz, K. H.; Kroll, F.; Harms, K. J . Organomet. Chem. 1993,459, 169. lm) Merino, I.; Hegedus, L. S., Organometallics 1995,14,2522. (41For citations to the literature on annulation of alkoxy complexes, Gilbert, see: Wulff, W. D.; Bax, B. M.; Brandvold, T. A,; Chan, K. S.; A. M.; Hsung, R. P.; Mitchell, J.;Clardy, J. Organometallics 1994,13, 102.

(5) For reviews on the synthetic applications of Fischer carbene complexes, see: ( a )Dotz, K. H.; Fischer, H.; Hofmann, P.; Kreissel, F. R.; Schubert, U.; Weiss, K Transition Metal Carbene Complexes; Verlag Chemie: Deerfield Beach, FL, 1984. (h) Dotz, K. H. Angew. Chem., Int. Ed. Engl. 1984,23,587. (cl Wulff, W. D. In Advances in MetalOrganic Chemistry; Liebeskind, L. s.,Ed.; JAI Press Inc.: Greenwich, CT, 1989; Vol. 1. (d) Dotz, K. H. In Organometallics in Organic Synthesis: Aspects of a Modern Interdisciplinary Field Dieck, H, de Meijere, A,, Eds.; Springer: Berlin, 1988. (e) Wulff, W. D. In Comprehensive Organic Synthesis; Trost, B. M., Fleming, I., Eds.; Pergamon Press: New York, 1991; Vol. 5. (6)Dotz, K. H. Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. Engl. 1975,14,644.

4 XR’ = O R

5 XR’=OR

6 notobserved

of its mechanistic complexity.’ It has only been more recently that the reactions of amino complexes with alkynes have been investigated, and under the proper conditions this reaction provides a very efficient entry to indanones via the hydrolysis of the aminoindenes that are the primary products of the r e a c t i ~ n . ~ ? ~ , ~ The reactions of aryl4alkoxy) carbene complexes can follow any of a number of reaction pathways, the partition between which can be influenced by the reaction conditions and functional group variations, with the end result often a formidable product distribution. Over 15 structurally different organic products have been reported from the reactions of aryl-(alkoxy) carbene complexes with alkyne^.^^^ The situation is not as complicated for alkenyl-(alkoxy)carbene complexes when phenol products are produced with high fidelity and with few side p r o d u ~ t s . ~Only , ~ J ~in one case has a five-membered has not yet been ring product been ~ b s e r v e d . What ~ determined is whether the annulations of alkenyl-(amino) carbene complexes with alkynes will give five-membered ring products as do aryl-(amino) carbene complexes.1°The (7) For synthetic applications of benzannulations of alkoxy complexes, see footnotes 4 and 5 in ref 4. (8) These observations were foreshadowed by an early related reaction: Datz, K. H.; Pruskil, I. Chem. Ber. 1978,112, 2059. (91 Dotz, K. H.; Dietz, R. Chem. Ber. 1978,111, 2517.

0022-326319511960-4566$09.00/0 0 1995 American Chemical Society

J. Org. Chem., Vol. 60,No. 14,1995 4567

Phenols from Alkenyl Fischer Carbene Complexes

Scheme 2 purpose of the present work is to provide the first study of the scope and product distribution from the reactions of a selected set of dkenyl-(amino) carbene complexes RLCtCRs (COkCr with alkynes.%-" _._ The solvent is one of the many factors that affects the distribution of products from the reactions of carbene Xl=OR XR = NR2 complexes with alkynes, especially between indene and phenol p r o d ~ c t i o n . ~ " ~ ~InJ ' Jsome ~ cases, each extreme 1 XR in the distribution between five- and six-membered ring products from the reactions of aryl4alkoxy) carbene complexes can be reached by varying the concentration, temperature and, most importantly, the polarity and/or coordinating ability of the solvent. With few exceptions, &E five-membered ring formation is fostered by the more polar s ~ l v e n t s . ~DMF J ~ and acetonitrile are known to strongly favor five-membered ring formation for the reactions of aryl4alkoxy) carbene c o m p l e ~ e s . ~ ~In, ~ ~ J ~ contrast, information about the effects of solvent on the annulations of aryl-(amino) carbene complexes is rare and most studies have been in DMF.2,3 There are no XR studies of the effect of solvent on a given reaction, but 12 indene products have been reported from the reactions 13A of aryl-(amino) carbene complexes with internal alkynes in DMF, THF, and t o l ~ e n e . ~ ,The ~ J ~ reactions with terminal alkynes have only been reported in DMF. Phenol products have never been reported from an intermolecular reaction of an amino carbene complex with an alkyne,5-m but there is one report of phenol 11 lo 138 formation in an intramolecular While the preference for indene over naphthol formasolvent assisted displacement of the double-bond in tion with amino-stabilized carbene complex is not clearly intermediate 8-Eto give 12 which results in an increase understood, it is likely played out in the set of intermediin indene formation via intermediate 13.12 Alternatively, ates that are pictured in Scheme 2.14 The difference in the solvent could play a role in facilitating reductiven product distribution between alkoxy and amino carbene elimination in 13 to give 15 relative to CO insertion to complexes may lie in the solvent effect on the partitioning give 9-E. It is also possible that the phenol product of the ~',17~-vinyl carbene complexed intermediate 8-E. results from CO insertion into the metallacyclohexadiene This is thought to be the first intermediate resulting from intermediate 13A. While some evidence has been prethe loss of a carbon monoxide ligand from the carbene sented to rule out this pathway in a specific system, there complex and the subsequent interaction with an is no basis to rule out this pathway in the general sense.12 The greater electron-donating ability of an amino versus While the mechanistic details of the reactions of carbene an alkoxy1 substituent XR in 8-E would be expected to complexes with alkynes are far from sorted out, a increase electron density at the metal center and increase consideration of the issues raised in Scheme 2 is useful the strength of the bonds to the carbon monoxide ligands. for considering the effects of solvent and substituents on This would disfavor carbon monoxide insertion to give the reactions of carbene complexes with alkynes. the vinyl ketene complex 9-E relative to an electrocyclic The annulations of arylamino carbene complexes have ring closure of 8-E to 14 and thus shift the distribution been most extensively studied with pyrrolidine and in favor of indene products. The source of the effect of morpholine derived carbene complexes with the morthe solvent on the partition between five- and sixpholino complexes giving the best yields of indene membered ring annulation products is also far from products.2 Unfortuantely, we could not make the morunderstood; however, a possible explanation is that pholino complex with the cyclohexenyl substituent on the cyclization to the aryl (or alkenyl) substituent can be carbene complex. Reaction of the cyclohexyl methoxy accelerated relative to carbon monoxide insertion by a complex 17 with morpholine leads only to the formation two-electron donor.14 It may be that this occurs by a of morpholine chromium pentacarbonyl in 50%yield. This type of cleavage has been seen with aryl16 and alkyl17 (10)(a)A p-aminovinyl carbene complex has been shown to give fivecomplexes but we have not yet attempted the alternate membered products: Duetsch, M.: Lackmann, R.; Stein, F.; de Meijere, A. Synlett. 1991, 324. (b) A five-membered ring product has been procedure that has been indicated to be useful for this observed with dimethylacetylene dicarboxylate: Barluenga, J.;Aznar, pr0b1em.l~ The formation of the pyrrolidine carbene F.; Martin, A.; Garcia-Granda, S.; Perez-Carreno, E., J. A m . Chem. complex 21 was accompanied by some cleavage of the Soc. 1994, 116, 11191. (11)Wulff, W. D.; Tang, P. C.; Chan, K. S.; McCallum, J. S.; Yang, carbene ligand to give the pentacarbonyl amine complex D. C.; Gilbertson, S. R. Tetrahedron 1986,41,5813. 22. As a result, we focused on the preparation and (12)Bos, M. E.; Wulff, W. D.; Miller, R. A.; Chamberlin, S.; Brandvold, T.A.J . A m . Chem. SOC.1991,113,9293. evaluation of the previously unknown dimethylamino (13)(a) Chamblerin. S.; Wulff. W. D.: Bax. B. Tetrahedron. 1993. carbene complexes 19, 20, 26, 27, and 30 since, in all 49,5531. (b) Chamberlin; S.;Wulff, W: D. i.Org. Chem. 1994,59;

&

\

t+S i

3047. f 14)For a discussion of the possible factors affecting five- versus six-membered ring formation, see refs 2 and 4 and citations therein. (15) (a) Hofmann, P.; Hammerle, M. Angew. Chem., Int. Ed. Engl. 1989,28, 908. (b) Hofmann, P.;Hammerle, M.; Unfied, G. New J. Chem. 1991.15,769.

~

~

~~

~

(16)Fischer, E. 0.;Heckl, B.; Werner, H. J.Organomet. Chem. 1971, 28, 359. (17)Chelain, E.;Goumont, R.; Hamon, L.; Parlier, A.; Rudler, M.; Rudler, H.; Daran, J.-C.; Vaissermann, J. J. A m . Chem. SOC.1992, 114,8088.

4568 J. Org. Chem., Vol. 60, No. 14, 1995

Wulff et al. Scheme 3

1) nBuLi, THF -78 a 0 OC

N,NHTrisyl

Me2NH

(CO)~M

16

*

CHpCI;, -78 * 25 OC

2) M(CO)6 THF, 25 OC 3) MeOTf, CHpCI2, 25 OC

(C0)5M

19 M = Cr 64 %from 16 M = Mo 45 Yo from 16

Et20,25 "C

22 3 4 %

(CO)&r